Literature DB >> 16934841

Swim training applied at early age is critical to adrenal medulla catecholamine content and to attenuate monosodium L-glutamate-obesity onset in mice.

D X Scomparin1, S Grassiolli, A C Marçal, C Gravena, A E Andreazzi, P C F Mathias.   

Abstract

Exercise has been recommended as a remedy against a worldwide obesity epidemic; however, the onset of excessive weight gain is not fully understood, nor are the effects of exercise on body weight control. Activity deficits of the sympathetic nervous system, including the sympathoadrenal axis, have been suggested to contribute to high fat accumulation in obesity. In the present work, swim training was used to observe fat accumulation and adrenal catecholamine stocks in hypothalamic-obese mice produced by neonatal treatment with monosodium L-glutamate (MSG). MSG-treated and normal mice swam for 15 min/day, 3 days a week, from weaning up to 90 days old (EXE 21-90); from weaning up to 50 days old (EXE 21-50) and from 60 up to 90 days old (EXE 60-90). Sedentary MSG and normal mice (SED groups) did not exercise at all. Animals were sacrificed at 90 days of age. MSG treatment induced obesity, demonstrated by a 43.08% increase in epididymal fat pad weight; these adult obese mice presented 27.7% less catecholamine stocks in their adrenal glands than untreated mice (p<0.001). Exercise reduced fat accumulation and increased adrenal catecholamine content in EXE 21-90 groups. These effects were more pronounced in MSG-mice than in normal ones. Halting the exercise (EXE 21-50 groups) still changed fat accretion and catecholamine stocks; however, no effects were recorded in the EXE 60-90 groups. We conclude that metabolic changes imposed by early exercise, leading to an attenuation of MSG-hypothalamic obesity onset, are at least in part due to sympathoadrenal activity modulation.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16934841     DOI: 10.1016/j.lfs.2006.07.012

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Life Sci        ISSN: 0024-3205            Impact factor:   5.037


  9 in total

1.  Short-term moderate exercise provides long-lasting protective effects against metabolic dysfunction in rats fed a high-fat diet.

Authors:  Laize Peron Tófolo; Tatiane Aparecida da Silva Ribeiro; Ananda Malta; Rosiane Aparecida Miranda; Rodrigo Mello Gomes; Júlio Cezar de Oliveira; Latifa Abdennebi-Najar; Douglas Lopes de Almeida; Amanda Bianchi Trombini; Claudinéia Conationi da Silva Franco; Audrei Pavanello; Gabriel Sergio Fabricio; Wilson Rinaldi; Luiz Felipe Barella; Paulo Cezar de Freitas Mathias; Kesia Palma-Rigo
Journal:  Eur J Nutr       Date:  2014-12-21       Impact factor: 5.614

Review 2.  Maternal diet, bioactive molecules, and exercising as reprogramming tools of metabolic programming.

Authors:  Paulo C F Mathias; Ghada Elmhiri; Júlio C de Oliveira; Carine Delayre-Orthez; Luiz F Barella; Laize P Tófolo; Gabriel S Fabricio; Abalo Chango; Latifa Abdennebi-Najar
Journal:  Eur J Nutr       Date:  2014-01-28       Impact factor: 5.614

3.  Swim training of monosodium L-glutamate-obese mice improves the impaired insulin receptor tyrosine phosphorylation in pancreatic islets.

Authors:  Rosiane Aparecida Miranda; Renato Chaves Souto Branco; Clarice Gravena; Luiz Felipe Barella; Claudinéia Conationi da Silva Franco; Ana Eliza Andreazzi; Júlio Cezar de Oliveira; Maria Cecília Picinato; Paulo Cezar de Freitas Mathias
Journal:  Endocrine       Date:  2012-09-16       Impact factor: 3.633

4.  Autonomic activity and glycemic homeostasis are maintained by precocious and low intensity training exercises in MSG-programmed obese mice.

Authors:  Dionizia Xavier Scomparin; Rodrigo Mello Gomes; Sabrina Grassiolli; Wilson Rinaldi; Adriana Gallego Martins; Júlio Cezar de Oliveira; Clarice Gravena; Paulo Cezar de Freitas Mathias
Journal:  Endocrine       Date:  2009-10-24       Impact factor: 3.633

5.  Competitive Swimming and Racial Disparities in Drowning.

Authors:  Samuel L Myers; Ana M Cuesta; Yufeng Lai
Journal:  Rev Black Polit Econ       Date:  2017-01-01

Review 6.  Review of physiology, clinical manifestations, and management of hypothalamic obesity in humans.

Authors:  Michelle Lee; Judith Korner
Journal:  Pituitary       Date:  2009       Impact factor: 4.107

7.  Impaired sympathoadrenal axis function contributes to enhanced insulin secretion in prediabetic obese rats.

Authors:  Ana Eliza Andreazzi; Sabrina Grassiolli; Paula Beatriz Marangon; Adriana Gallego Martins; Júlio Cézar de Oliveira; Rosana Torrezan; Clarice Gravena; Raúl Marcel González Garcia; Paulo Cezar de Freitas Mathias
Journal:  Exp Diabetes Res       Date:  2011-08-16

8.  Maternal Diet Supplementation with n-6/n-3 Essential Fatty Acids in a 1.2 : 1.0 Ratio Attenuates Metabolic Dysfunction in MSG-Induced Obese Mice.

Authors:  Josiane Morais Martin; Rosiane Aparecida Miranda; Luiz Felipe Barella; Kesia Palma-Rigo; Vander Silva Alves; Gabriel Sergio Fabricio; Audrei Pavanello; Claudinéia Conationi da Silva Franco; Tatiane Aparecida Ribeiro; Jesuí Vergílio Visentainer; Elton Guntendeorfer Banafé; Clayton Antunes Martin; Paulo Cezar de Freitas Mathias; Júlio Cezar de Oliveira
Journal:  Int J Endocrinol       Date:  2016-12-05       Impact factor: 3.257

9.  Low-intensity and moderate exercise training improves autonomic nervous system activity imbalanced by postnatal early overfeeding in rats.

Authors:  Wilson Rinaldi; Rodrigo Mello Gomes; Dionízia Xavier Scomparin; Sabrina Grassiolli; Tatiane Aparecida Ribeiro; Gabriel Sergio Fabricio; Luiz Felipe Barella; Audrei Pavanello; Amanda Bianchi Trombini; Paulo Cezar de Freitas Mathias; Júlio Cezar de Oliveira
Journal:  J Int Soc Sports Nutr       Date:  2014-06-02       Impact factor: 5.150

  9 in total

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